stories along the adventure

in-progress masterpiece

I recently finished Emily Freeman’sA Million Little Ways, and I loved everything about it.

If you long to live a life with purpose, read this book. If you’re afraid that your life doesn’t have a purpose, then even more so, this book is for you. If you’ve bought into the world’s attitude that productivity is king, again, read this book. Really, if you are a human and love beauty and wonderful, personal writing, then chances are you’ll enjoy this book.

I am all of the people I just described above. My deepest fear is I would live a life that does not matter. I long to live a life that is deep, full, and meaningful. And Emily’s book shattered all of my preconceived notions on what a life like that truly entails.

She writes from a belief that because we were created in the image of the Creator, we are all creators ourselves. She equates our life to a masterpiece, a poem that the Creator is writing line by line. And even the everyday, normal rhythms of our life have a place in this poem. More so, the beauty of the poem is in the everyday rhythms and doings of our days.

And this, this idea that our life is a masterpiece, a work of art that is constantly in progress, that’s where God began wrecking my ways of thinking about life.

You see, I’m a list person. I wake up and before my feet hit the floor I’ve begun making a running tab of what I have going on that day, and what I’d like to get done. The first thing I do when I get to my office in the morning is make a to-do list. Lists are how I stay focused on tasks. To be sure, they are helpful at work, or when I’m running errands. But, I’ve come to notice something different in myself lately. Lists have become more than a helpful tool. They are how I get through days.

If I’m feeling overwhelmed, I make a list. If I have some free time and I’m not sure how to spend it, I make a list of all the things I could do. Lists are comforting, they calm chaos, they give me control, they are concrete, they leave little room for nuance and the unknown, and (this is the key) I can cross them off. As I was reading about living life as a poem, an unfinished work of art, that idea slowly began butting heads with my love for lists, which is really a love of productivity. Because to be honest, I’ve been wearing around checked-off lists like a badge of honor. Look at me! How productive I am! I matter! Oh, and those lists that don’t get checked-off? Filed away in the drawer of shame. Push those away, I don’t want to think about them because a list that isn’t completely taken care of must prove that I am not enough.

Checklists have become more than simply a tool to actually help me focus once in a while. They’ve become one of the ways I measure my worth. I have been living life like it’s one giant checklist, and I’m coming to think that’s not the healthiest way for me to live.

For example, my life checklist will often look like this: pay off debt, write a book, write full-time, live in another country, start a fly-fishing/outdoor ministry/ backpacking business with Taylor, and so on. Nothing on that list is bad, but here’s the problem: behind each item on that list, there are about 1,000 other items. To go with the analogy, each one of those items is its own checklist.

More than that, those things aren’t cold, concrete, shallow items. They are dreams. And surely they will form and take shape and mold over the years. In my mind, checklists don’t allow for nuance. They don’t allow for grey area, or true depth. It’s black and white, you got it done or you didn’t. They don’t take into account the journey, the process, which may be the most important part of it all anyway.

One of my good friends, John, is an artist. When he paints, the white canvas doesn’t drastically change into a finished, clear picture right away. He mixes the colors, working to get them just right. And then, he begins painting shapes. He’s not worried about details at this point, and when he’s done with this stage it can often look like he forgot something. The canvas is left blurry, no sharp edges, no clear distinction on what it is he’s painting. But it’s ok. It’s all in the process. Over time, he fills in lighting and detail. The picture begins to take more shape, become more clear. Sometimes it doesn’t end up the way he originally envisioned it, but it’s a masterpiece nonetheless.

If I only saw a blank canvas one day, and finished painting the next, it wouldn’t make sense to me how John got there. I missed the process. I missed mixing colors and being ok with the uncertainty of blurry shapes and the slow, tedious work of filling in detail. The process allows for growth, for freedom, for change, for depth. In the process, things don’t always make sense. They definitely aren’t black and white. But they all work together to form one complete piece of art.

And such is life.

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P.S. If you like what you see from John, some of his art is available on his etsy shop here.

About Me

Hi there, and welcome to my little space on the internet. I'm Lindsay, and my husband and I call Austin home. We both love Jesus, good food and the outdoors. I write here and for the Austin Stone Story Team.